Russia threatens to blacklist 104 Americans

Russia warned that Friday's scheduled publication of a list of alleged human-rights abusers would be a “serious blow” to U.S.-Russian relations and that it's ready to retaliate by releasing its own register of 104 blacklisted American officials.

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The State Department has until the end of Friday to give Congress the names of Russian officials targeted under the so-called Magnitsky Act that President Obama signed into law four months ago.

"The appearance of any lists will doubtless have a very negative effect on bilateral Russian-American relations," President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters on Friday, according to Reuters.

Publishing the list, Russian officials told Russia's Kommersant newspaper, would “doom” upcoming talks with National Security Advisor Tom Donilon, who's visiting Moscow on Sunday to discuss further cuts to the two countries' nuclear arsenals among other topics.

“This agreement can be considered as an unfortunate accident,” a Russian official told the newspaper. “The U.S. administration is clearly not planning to synchronize the arrival of Donilon and disclosure of the Magnitsky list.”

The White House has high hopes for Donilon's trip, and is likely to seek to limit the Magnitsky Act's impact even if it means upsetting human-rights champions in Congress.

Donilon's meetings with “senior Russian officials” on Sunday and Monday aim in part to persuade the Kremlin to abandon its support for Syria's Bashar Assad and to continue working with the United States to force Iran to abandon its alleged nuclear weapons program.

Donilon and his counterparts will “review next steps in our bilateral relationship, as well as a range of key foreign policy, security, and economic issues on our international agenda,” National Security Council Caitlin Hayden said. “This visit offers an important opportunity to consult with senior officials ahead of President Obama’s meetings with President Putin later this year.”